Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Watch Dog over the Herbarium: Alfred Ewart, Victorian Government Botanist 1906 - 1921

View through CrossRef
Alfred Ewart was Government Botanist in the service of the Victorian Government from February 1906 to February 1921. He was concurrently foundation Professor of Botany at the University of Melbourne, both positions being part-time. As Government Botanist he was in charge of the National Herbarium of Victoria, which had fallen into a slump after the death of the first Government Botanist, Ferdinand von Mueller, in 1896. Ewart was determined to restore the Herbarium to its former position as a leading centre of research on the Victorian and indeed the Australian flora. In doing so he enlisted the aid of the many capable botanists who were members of the Field Naturalists' Club of Victoria. The Herbarium being in the Department of Agriculture, Ewart had duties in relation to the business of that Department. These had mainly to do with weeds, impure seeds and providing advice to departmental officers. Of particular importance was his taxonomic work as Government Botanist. He published a series of papers and books on the flora of Victoria and the Northern Territory, and engaged in debates with colleagues both interstate and overseas. Ewart ceased to be Government Botanist when the professorship was made a full-time appointment in response to increased teaching loads.
Title: Watch Dog over the Herbarium: Alfred Ewart, Victorian Government Botanist 1906 - 1921
Description:
Alfred Ewart was Government Botanist in the service of the Victorian Government from February 1906 to February 1921.
He was concurrently foundation Professor of Botany at the University of Melbourne, both positions being part-time.
As Government Botanist he was in charge of the National Herbarium of Victoria, which had fallen into a slump after the death of the first Government Botanist, Ferdinand von Mueller, in 1896.
Ewart was determined to restore the Herbarium to its former position as a leading centre of research on the Victorian and indeed the Australian flora.
In doing so he enlisted the aid of the many capable botanists who were members of the Field Naturalists' Club of Victoria.
The Herbarium being in the Department of Agriculture, Ewart had duties in relation to the business of that Department.
These had mainly to do with weeds, impure seeds and providing advice to departmental officers.
Of particular importance was his taxonomic work as Government Botanist.
He published a series of papers and books on the flora of Victoria and the Northern Territory, and engaged in debates with colleagues both interstate and overseas.
Ewart ceased to be Government Botanist when the professorship was made a full-time appointment in response to increased teaching loads.

Related Results

Brandis the Forgotten Botanist
Brandis the Forgotten Botanist
Generally, Dietrich Brandis is remembered as the first Inspector General of Forests in British India. However, before he left Europe, he had a university education as a biologist a...
George Bentham (1800–1884): the life of a botanist's botanist
George Bentham (1800–1884): the life of a botanist's botanist
George Bentham (1800–1884) is seen as a pre-eminent botanist whose prodigious output was in part connected with his freedom from obligations other than his work and his legal backg...
‘Shrieking soldiers … wiping clean the earth’: hearing apocalyptic environmentalism in the music of Botanist
‘Shrieking soldiers … wiping clean the earth’: hearing apocalyptic environmentalism in the music of Botanist
AbstractThis article presents a case study of ecocritical black metal, delving into the apocalypticism of the California-based black metal band Botanist, who conjures a world in wh...
How to Know whether a Dog is Dangerous: Myth, Superstition and its Influence on the Human-dog Relationship
How to Know whether a Dog is Dangerous: Myth, Superstition and its Influence on the Human-dog Relationship
The relationship between humans and dogs is complex and ambivalent. The dog was the first animal that Homo sapiens domesticated. This means that the human-dog relationship has last...
How to Know whether a Dog is Dangerous: Myth, Superstition and its Influence on the Human-dog Relationship
How to Know whether a Dog is Dangerous: Myth, Superstition and its Influence on the Human-dog Relationship
The relationship between humans and dogs is complex and ambivalent. The dog was the first animal that Homo sapiens domesticated. This means that the human-dog relationship has last...
The Late-Victorian ‘New Man’ and the Neo-Victorian ‘Neo-Man’
The Late-Victorian ‘New Man’ and the Neo-Victorian ‘Neo-Man’
The New Man was a crucial topic of discussion and a continual preoccupation in late-Victorian feminist writing, precisely because he was more often a wished-for presence than an ac...
Back in time for utopia: Neo-Victorian utopianism and the return to William Morris
Back in time for utopia: Neo-Victorian utopianism and the return to William Morris
When we think of the Victorian era, images of shrouded piano legs, dismal factories and smoggy streets often come to mind. However, the 19th century has been rediscovered in recent...
Political Legitimacy, Democracy and Islamic Law: The Place of Self‐Government in Islamic Political Thought
Political Legitimacy, Democracy and Islamic Law: The Place of Self‐Government in Islamic Political Thought
Abstract Contemporary Political Islam, or Islamism, is commonly defined as a movement that seeks to apply the Sharīʿa as the basic law of Muslim states. This suggests that politica...

Back to Top